New mental health crisis respite care facility to open in Dunedin

Southern DHB Executive Director of Mental Health, Addictions and Intellectual Disabilities Toni...
Southern DHB Executive Director of Mental Health, Addictions and Intellectual Disabilities Toni Gutschlag.
Dunedin’s capacity for emergency mental health respite care is set to increase through an expanded service contract between the Southern District Health Board and community service provider Pact.

A five-bed home will open in September, providing adults experiencing acute mental distress with 24-hour in-home support in a residential environment less than 10 minutes from Dunedin Hospital.

The Pact-owned, well-established property will be furnished in comfortable, spacious, home-like surroundings and support with an emphasis on privacy, dignity, wellbeing, comfort, safety, and easy access to a tranquil garden setting. Families, who are essential to a service user’s recovery, will also have a space to see their loved ones privately or even stay overnight on site if they wish to do so.

The home will be run by Pact, which specialises in helping people recovering from mental illness through supported 24/7 accommodation, planned respite care and community support. Pact already manages a similar home in Lower Hutt.

Toni Gutschlag, Executive Director of Mental Health, Addictions and Intellectual Disabilities for the Southern DHB, says the new partnership will provide people in crisis with professional clinically led community-based support rather than hospitalisation, enabling them to remain closer to home.

“Dunedin has historically had a one-bed unit available for emergency respite care, so this capacity expansion is addressing a long-standing service gap.

“Having a dedicated team of trained mental health support workers and a larger facility with comfortable, home-like surroundings will allow us to provide earlier intervention and more focused care for people in the Dunedin region. We anticipate that this will reduce hospital admissions and hope it leads to an improved experience for users and their whānau.”

The new facility will increase current capacity from 365 bed nights to 1,825 bed nights per year, freeing up hospital beds and staff. Inpatient hospital services will continue to be available for those who need them.

Work is also getting underway to set up a crisis support service in the Queenstown Lakes District. More details on this will be released once available.

 

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